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Mapping party and leader image
Professor Roger Mortimore explains “perceptual maps”, which present what the public thinks of the parties (and their leaders) visually so they can easily be compared.
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Energy policy after the General Election
Antonia Dickman, Joint Head of Environment Research and Stefan Durkacz, Research Manager discuss energy consumers' priorities and the implications for policy makers after the next General Election.
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Your Care Rating 2014 Survey Results
Results from the 2014 Your Care Rating Survey shows that resident feedback broadly paints an encouraging picture of life in care homes from the majority of homes which took part.
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School leaders' views on the state of education
The Key's school leaders are unconvinced by the current Government's performance on education - just 10% are satisfied with the Government's education record, while 77% are dissatisfied.
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Hard work, hard times: the lived experience of in-work poverty
Sara Davidson from Ipsos Scotland writes for Scottish Policy Now on our recent work in Glasgow confirming that having a job is no longer a guarantee of avoiding poverty.
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Peak in selling sentiment as house price optimism for 2015 grows
The third monthly wave of the Halifax Housing Market Confidence Tracker in 2015 shows that two thirds of Britons (67%) expect the average UK property price to rise this year, up slightly from 64% who said this in February 2015.
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Swing or Roundabout?
Dr. Roger Mortimore, director of political analysis, writes in the Huffington Post that swing isn't so simple anymore.
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First results from major longitudinal survey on attitudes to immigration
In a unique survey, Ipsos will be interviewing a longitudinal panel of respondents on their attitudes to immigration throughout and after the election campaign.
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Public culture in Britain is biased against business and most politicians don't understand business
Over half of British adults don't trust business leaders, so businesses must above all else, act with honesty and integrity says Andrew Croll of Ipsos Loyalty.
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Majority of public back `borrow-to-build'
A majority of the public say they support the next Government borrowing money to fund the building of more affordable housing for people to buy or rent in England, according to a new poll by Ipsos for the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH).